close

Look for game fish around the bait schools

4 min read
article image -
Photo contributed Jack Metz with one of many redfish caught between Matlacha and Bokeelia. He was fishing friday with Captain Bill Russell.

If you spent any time on the water recently you had to marvel at the mass amounts of baitfish. From small inch long glass minnows to large mullet bait is everywhere, on the calm days it looked like rain on the water except the skies are clear. Often the best fishing was found near the bait schools inshore, offshore and on the beaches.

Fishing over ledges offshore has produced good catches of gag grouper and mangrove snapper in depths from forty to sixty feet. The best bet was dropping large live pinfish for the grouper that measured up to twenty-eight inches or dropping live pilchards for snapper up to twenty inches. A few king mackerel up to twenty pounds were also reported from these areas. Red grouper, lane snapper and grunts were caught southwest of Sanibel in depths from fifty to sixty-five feet over hard coral bottom. Again live pinfish worked best for the groupers and cut squid, sardines or shrimp for the others.

Off the beaches large schools of small baitfish attracted lots of attention from Spanish mackerel, ladyfish and sharks. Captain Gary Clarks reports activity from redfish Pass south to Bowman’s Beach on Sanibel. Look for the birds and feeding activity and drift through the activity while casting small silver or gold spoons. Captain Clark also reports tarpon in the same area as they were often sighted rolling just off the beach, about the same distance offshore as the idle buoys. Trout and whiting were also caught on the beach near Blind Pass and the Sanibel Rocks on live shrimp or quarter ounce chartreuse jig heads with a new penny color Berkley Gulp shrimp tail bounced on bottom.

Inshore, anglers are catching some really big trout for this time of year and most were found around mullet schools. Trout up to twenty-five inches were caught in Matlacha Pass and Pine Island Sound, on live bait the action was best on the higher stages of the tide while early morning and late afternoon turned up a few large fish on mullet imitating top water lures. We actually had a couple days fishing around oyster bars in Matlacha Pass where we had a difficult time catching fish under twenty inches, not a bad problem to have. Most of the trout were twenty-two to twenty-four inches and were caught on live pilchards around schooling mullet. We also caught redfish up to twenty-eight inches with most in the lower slot around twenty-one to twenty-three inches, some really large bluefish for our standards and a few flounder, snapper and snook.

Captain Shawn McQuade reports good fishing for redfish on the eastern side of Pine Island Sound and Charlotte Harbor. Schools of fifty-to seventy fish were found working along drop-offs on the late afternoon falling tides. Almost all the fish were over the slot with the largest measuring near forty inches, they were caught on both live bait and artificials.

I’ve been fishing these waters for a long time and I cannot remember a time when there was so much bait and such a variety. Everywhere you look the water is literally alive with some type baitfish. Every day when we catch fish I wonder why a fish would even eat bait with a hook stuck in it when there is so much food available, but I am sure glad they do. I got to think with all the food in the water our game fish are eating well, growing fast and reproducing often, that should make for even better fishing in the near future.

If you have a fishing report of for charter information, please contact us at 239-283-7960, www.fishpineisland.com or gcl2fish@live.com. Have a safe week and good fishin’.